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And
it maketh all, the small, and the great, and the rich, and the poor, and the
freemen, and the servants, that it may give to them a mark upon their right hand
or upon their foreheads, and that no one may be able to buy, or to sell, except
he who is having the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. Here
is the wisdom! He who is having the understanding, let him count the number of
the beast, for the number of a man it is, and its number is six hundred and
sixty six. The
Book of Revelations 13:16-18 Two
days later the ship bearing Daniel and Moor came to the stone dock at the
river’s edge. Perched high upon the black cliffs above them towered the
fortress of the Kings of Asulon, Maôz-Thabera,
‘The Fortress of the Burning’.
The main gate faced the river and could be reached only by a long wooden stair
beginning at the dock at the water’s edge. An honor guard of the King’s
paladins, clad in polished armor, approached the ship. Moor stood beside Daniel
and nodded to the captain. “All
hail, Prince Daniel, son of King Argeus!” called out the captain. The paladins
let out a cheer and beat their swords upon their shields. “My
old home was never this loud,” Daniel said, grinning. “Best
get used to it,” Moor said. “The greater your status, the greater the noise
at your comings and goings.” They
walked down the gangway toward the cheering paladins, who formed up around
Daniel and Moor and led them down the dock. At the stair, one line of men moved
forward to precede them, the second followed behind.
Daniel and Moor began their trek up the long wooden stair that climbed
back and forth along the cliff face to the fortress. Kings of other realms would
have ordered a magnificent set of stone stairs built into a cliff such as this,
but the kings of Asulon thought as warriors before they thought as kings. A
stone staircase, while impressive, in truth endangered a fortress. Stairs made
of wood could be burned if an invader came sailing up the river, while stone
stairs could not. Over
two hundred years had passed since the defeat of the last army to come close
enough to the fortress that the stairs had to be burned. The kings of Asulon had
long memories, though. The stairs remained of wood. Daniel
came to a landing halfway up the stair and turned to look out over the water.
The mast of the ship that brought him was already far below. Other ships plied
the river, carrying the commerce of Asulon. “Do
my parents make this climb every time they wish to leave the fortress?” asked
Daniel, who had not been to the fortress of the king since he was a young child
and remembered only the long stair. “This
is not the only way in or out of the fortress,” replied Moor. In a low voice,
he added, “But that is not what keeps them in the fortress now.” Daniel
wanted to ask what he meant by this, but the Etruscan, never very talkative,
turned and continued up the stairs. Instead, Daniel remembered his family home
and felt a bit disappointed he would not see it now. He would not have time
before his journey to across the sea. His
family’s house sat on a thick finger of land that jutted out into a lake. Nine
other homes ringed that lake, each set out into the water on a peninsula of land
built for that purpose, each the home of a paladin family who could come to the
aid of their neighbors quickly, if need be. The two-story, stone houses each
faced a large, square inner courtyard that stayed cool in the summer and
protected from the wind in the winter. Only the upper floor of these homes had
windows that faced outward, but both floors had windows that faced the inner
courtyard. In
Daniel’s home, the lower floor held a large dining hall, kitchen and storage
rooms. The upper floor housed bedchambers and
a large library, which held his father’s many books and maps. This latter room
delighted Daniel in his youth, for many of the books told of far-off places and
peoples, and the names on the maps whispered to a young boy of mystery and
adventure. Daniel
missed that home. Often, after a day of training, he and his father would walk
out the back door of their house, take the few steps to the lake and fish till
they were called in for supper. Daniel had hoped to do that again before he left
for Logres. Though he looked out over the river now, Daniel doubted he would do
any fishing with his father here. Daniel’s
father, Argeus, a seasoned warrior who had served in two wars; was not a violent
man. Above all, he enjoyed fishing in the lake with his son and reading good
books. After his release from active service, Argeus and the other elder
paladins of the freehold would lead the local militia, made up of farmers and
craftsmen, in military exercises once a month. That was how the older paladins
spent much of their time; training others for wars they hoped would never be
fought. From
the age of six until he went off to the war college at Caurus at sixteen, Daniel
had spent three hours, six mornings a week, in the library with his father,
learning mathematics and the sciences, the history of Asulon and of his family,
the House of Asher. Afternoons were spent outside in the courtyard or forest,
learning the ways of the sword and the bow. On the first day of the week,
Daniel’s Freehold would gather together for worship at one of their homes.
Each father would take a turn reading aloud from the books of God and then
leading the discussions of them. Daniel was always so proud to see the respect
shown to Argeus (easily the eldest among the men of their Freehold) when it came
his time to read. Daniel’s
mother was Isoldé, daughter of Anak the Undying, the last of the warrior angels
sent to aid mankind when the world was young, Isoldé inspired awe in common
men, for the light of her father’s former home in the heavens shone in her
eyes. His mother had been his main teacher for the first six years of his life.
As was the custom among paladin families, Isoldé had taught her son to read,
write and speak fluently in the three languages he would need as a paladin.
Westerness, the tongue of Asulon and the Unicorn Kingdoms, Magogian, the
language of their enemy the Magog, and Cymru, the ancient tongue of southwestern
Logres and spoken now by so few that it was used as a battle language among the
paladins. Daniel
did not find it strange to be the son of a warrior and grandson of an angel. For
the last thousand years, all the men of his house had wed the daughters of Anak,
as would he when he arrived in Logres. This gave them both the right to rule in
Asulon and twice the life span of common men. Daniel
and Moor reached the top of the stairs, where a line of servants waited. They
cheered when they saw him. So
much for a quiet homecoming,
thought Daniel. “Prince
Daniel, welcome home!” came a voice from behind the line. A thin man in his
early sixties came forward to bow before Daniel. Lucan, his father’s eldest
servant no longer wore the homespun linen tunic and trousers Daniel remembered.
The old man now dressed in rich robes of fine blue silk that would have cost him
a month’s pay as the servant of a retired paladin. Daniel
took the old man by the shoulders and returned him to a standing position.
“Lucan, save the formalities for the throne room--though when I first saw your
robes, I thought you must be the king himself.” “Me,
the king!” cried Lucan, aghast. “If you think this bed sheet they have me in
is good enough for the king--well, just wait till you see his majesty. But come
now, young master, let us enter. Your parents know your ship has arrived and are
waiting to see you.” Daniel
crossed the drawbridge between the final landing and the fortress. Maôz-Thabera
, so gray and imposing from the exterior, was all light and wonder inside. The
walls, plastered and whitewashed, were covered in fine tapestries or painted
with murals depicting great men and great battles. The brightly painted pillars
carved as trees with vines spiraling upwards to the ceiling graced the great
hall and throne room. Fine mosaics decorated the floors of the dining halls.
Many pieces of colored glass, like living light, depicted famous kings or
warriors of Asulon on each window in the fortress (high ones that faced the
river and many more facing the protected inner courtyard). Servants bustled to
and fro, while important men on important errands moved purposefully through the
corridors. Lucan
and their escort brought Daniel and Moor into the throne room and then through
it. “The
king commanded that you be brought to his chambers the moment you arrived,”
Lucan said. “There will be a grand feast tomorrow, but for now it’s no
wonder the king and queen would rather just be your father and mother and sup
with you in private.” Two
tall men in the black cloaks and boots of the paladins stood before an oaken
door. They snapped to attention as Daniel approached. Moor raised the iron
knocker and struck the door twice. The
door opened. A maidservant curtsied and said, “Welcome, Prince Daniel, Master
Moor. The King and Queen await you.” They
entered a plainly furnished room with a table and twelve chairs set around it.
Maps of various parts of Asulon lined the wall. Daniel guessed it to be a
combined meeting room and dining hall for times when the king wished to meet
with his councilors less formally. A maidservant brought Daniel to his chair
(Moor preferred to stand) and left through a side door. Very soon he heard
voices approaching. The door swung open and a very old man in a bright green
tunic entered. He struck the floor three times with his staff. “His Majesty,
First of Paladins, Lion of Asulon, Defender of the Laws of the Realm, Protector
of…” “Blast
it all, man,” came another voice from the hall. “Save your harangue for
tomorrow night.” With
that, Argeus, tall and broad shouldered, strode into the room. His
silver-gray mane and beard held none of the reddish-brown of his youth, but his
voice remained firm and his steps sure. He wore the deep purple and gold robes
of kingship. Just
behind Argeus came Queen Isoldé, bright in a dove white dress. She rushed to
embrace her son. “Oh,
Daniel, Daniel,” she said. “This one year has felt like one hundred.” “Come
now, Isoldé, let a man look on his son,” Argeus said. Father and son
embraced, then Argeus held Daniel at arm’s length, inspecting him.
“Aye, it is like water to a thirsty man to see you again, boy.”
Daniel’s
mother and father looked much the same to him. His father’s laugh still said
all you needed to know about him, hale and hardy, generous to all around him.
His mother’s eyes still shone with the light of her father’s race. “Master
Moor,” the queen said, turning to the Etruscan and taking his right hand in
hers. “Thank you for returning our son to us. As always, you do us service
worthy of a great friend.” Moor
bowed formally and said. “My queen does me honor.” He turned and saluted the
king. “If you will excuse me, your majesty. I have measures I must discuss
with the guards concerning tomorrow’s banquet.” The
king nodded. Moor bowed again and left the chamber.
“Your mother prayed for you every night, Daniel,” Argeus said, still
grinning over his son. “Look at him, Isoldé’,” he said, slapping Daniel
solidly on the back. “He’s as fit as a racehorse; you need not have
worried.” Servants
entered bearing trays and set a bowl and mug before Daniel. The bowl held a bed
of boiled noodles, a poached egg and a link of sausage. Simple food for a
king’s home, but typical for paladins, who ate frugally as becomes warriors. “Duck
liver sausage!” cried Daniel in joy. “And milk! Oh, you do not know how long
I have pined for a mug of fresh milk.” “I
remember my own time of solitude,” Argeus said. “The old men who trained me
said that you dream of the foods of home at two times during your year alone:
your first week and your last, when the time of your return draws near.” “Yes,
but how did you know that I had dreamed of this?” asked Daniel. Isoldé
smiled. “This is what I used to feed you and your father when you both
returned cold and wet from a winter hunting trip. So I thought it good to feed
you now after so long a trip of your own.”
For the next hour parents and son dined and talked and laughed. As
Argeus finished telling the tale of his first night in the fortress, when he got
lost trying to find the pantry, he caught Daniel looking at his mother with
tears in his eyes. “What
ails you, son?” asked the king, knowing the answer, for he had had a similar
homecoming many years ago. The
prince put down his mug and took hold of his parents’ hands. “I
did not miss the good food of my mother’s table the most while I was in the
wilderness, nor the comfort of my father’s house. I missed this,” he said,
looking at his father and mother. “I missed our laughing and talking the night
away so much that my heart nearly broke with the missing of it.” Isoldé’s
eyes shone brightly as she looked upon her son. “Daniel…
we…” began Argeus, knowing that he should change the subject before he too
came to tears, “we want you to tell us all of your adventures in the wild,
from the first day to the last.” And
the three of them ate and drank and laughed and cried long into the night. * * * * * The
next day Daniel woke when a shaft of light touched his face. An old king of
Asulon tried unsuccessfully to scowl down at him from the stained glass window
in the wall, but the multihued sunlight came through the image too brightly for
him to look menacing. "I'm
sure, sir, that you look far more fierce from the outside," said the prince
with a yawn. He looked around the room and saw his buckskins set neatly on a
dressing table. Daniel vaguely remembered Lucan escorting him back to his
bedchamber and helping him off with his clothing. Once his mother had retired
for the night, Daniel had stayed up with his father. They had toasted to each
other’s hunting tales (with a very good wine, if Daniel remembered right) till
the cry of the night watch bade them to bed. Now Daniel also found a new set of
clothing laid out near a large copper bathing tub. A full bath will have to
wait, thought Daniel, the
king's fortress is now my father's house and I must see all of it. He
poured some cool water from a pitcher into a washbasin, washed himself quickly
and donned the black cotton trousers, tall black boots and white silk shirt left
for him. A black leather belt lay beside the clothes, with a buckle shaped like
a round shield and set with a gemstone at its center. Daniel stared thoughtfully
at the stone, brushing its surface with his fingertips. All the men of the House
of Asher received such a buckle when they graduated from the war college at
Caurus as paladins, knight-protectors of the realm. Then, Daniel had been
given a buckle of silver, set with black onyx. This buckle was gold, set with a
purple amethyst, signifying that he was of the king's own household.
A
knock came to the door. "Enter," Daniel called out. A
servant opened the door and Lucan entered. "Good morning, my prince. Did
you sleep well?" "Yes,
Lucan, very well," replied Daniel smiling at the way the old retainer said
'my prince'. "You are enjoying this turn of events, aren't
you, Lucan?" "Oh,
yes, young sir. I have gone up immeasurably in my wife's eyes now that I am the
prince's own chamberlain. You would think I had been made a general or some such
thing." Daniel
bowed with a flourish. "Lucan, I am always pleased to contribute to your
wedded bliss. Well, come now, sir general. Show a former wild man of the woods,
now turned prince, what this fortress is all about." The
two left the chamber. After a stair, a corridor, and another stair, they came to
a long hallway ending in a stout oak door guarded by two paladins. Lucan
unlocked the door and Daniel entered what, as a small boy, he had thought must
be the largest room in Asulon, the throne room of the king. Tall windows of
stained glass lined the south wall. The floor held a mosaic map of Asulon
showing its cities, mountain ranges, grasslands, great rivers and many of the
animals found in each region. The sky blue, domed ceiling had white clouds and
soaring eagles painted upon it. Many spears thrust out from the top of the
walls, each holding the banner of a former king of Asulon. Lucan
gestured to the banners as they walked. "There, young sir, on the north
wall nearest the throne, hangs, of course, the green banner of Asa our first
king, who led the House of Asher across the great ocean and brought peace to
Asulon. And next to his banner hangs that of his son, Adom. Now, King Anak
himself trained Adom in the art of kingship..." Daniel
saw a great many banners hanging from the walls and recalled how Lucan
prided himself on his knowledge of Asher family history. He steeled himself for
a long lecture on the subject, then remembered his training in tactics and
decided to outflank his opponent through diversion. "Lucan,
tell me, do you remember when I was a young boy and played a trick on you with
the hunting dogs? I took all the dogs out of their kennels and moved them into
the storehouse, leaving the gate open to make it look as if they had all run
off." Lucan’s
brows knit in a scowl. "Do I remember it? Who was responsible for those
dogs and who would lose his position if they had indeed run off? I got on my
horse and rode off a' hunting after them." "You
were gone for four hours," remembered Daniel. "And
when I returned, did I not see you yourself smirking in a corner?" Lucan
replied. "Do
you know what my father did with me for my little jest?" asked Daniel. "I
did not think it so little a jest at the time, young master," said the old
man in mock indignity. "He
took me into his war room and sat me down in his huge black chair. Then, without
speaking a word, he tied my wrist to the chair with this thin little bit of
sewing thread and just walked away, leaving the chamber door wide open. Now, an
infant could have broken that thread, but I did not dare move." "Why
not?" asked Lucan, a slight smile on his lips. "If
my father had tied me down with a strong rope, perhaps I would have tried to
free myself and run off," replied Daniel. "But tying me down with the
thread worried me. It was as if he dared me to break it." "And
then what happened?" asked Lucan, though he already knew the answer. "Nothing.
I just sat there dreaming up all manner of punishments my father might give me
when he returned. The longer I sat there, the worse my punishment became. Do you
know how long I sat there?" "Yes,
young master, I do at that," replied Lucan. "Four hours on the nose.
Just as long as I spent hunting those not-missing dogs, and just long enough for
your father and me to finish our third game of battle board in the dining
room." "You
knew!" exclaimed the prince. "Yes,
I knew. Your father asked me what worries I had gone through searching for the
dogs, and he invited me to join him for the They
left the throne room and made their way past the open door of a wide dining
hall. At many tables and benches, paladins, workmen, and artisans took their
places with the sound of clanking pots, clinking crocks and much laughter.
Daniel stopped at the doorway, scanning the crowd to find any familiar faces. "We
should not delay, my prince," Lucan said. "The king and queen will be
expecting you." Just
then a voice called out from a nearby table, "Hey, look what's come
floating back down the river!" "Too
late, I'm caught," said Daniel with a laugh, as a swarm of young men
gathered around him with much backslapping and many questions about his
adventure. "Daniel
has returned--Hurrah! Hurrah!" They picked him up on their shoulders and
carried him around the room. Soon the rest of the room took up the cry.
"Hurrah for Prince Daniel! Hurrah!" Lucan
stood in the doorway a moment and shook his head, but once he turned away from
the chamber a grin spread across his face.
*
* * * * "The
food," Daniel said at the end of the meal, "was nearly as good as
seeing your ugly old faces again." One
of the young men grabbed the face of his neighbor in both of his hands,
distorting it, and said, "Who are you calling old?" They all laughed. A
boy in the dark green tunic of a squire in training came up to a paladin
captain, who then pointed out Daniel. The boy marched up to Daniel with a
serious face and bowed. "Prince Daniel." "Yes,
lad?" "The
king wishes your presence in his chambers, your highness." Daniel
had to smile at the boy's manner. "What is your name, lad?" "Tomkin,
your highness," said the boy. "Well,
Tomkin, I am new to the fortress and need the assistance of an experienced man
to guide me." The
boy stood a bit taller. "Your highness, I can guide you. I know this old
place like I know my mom's own kitchen." "Well
then, Sir Guide, lead on." said Daniel, knowing Tomkin would be the hero at
the table of the junior squires that night. Daniel's friends shouted their
good-byes as the prince followed the boy out of the dinning hall. They made
their way back past the throne room and to a large oak door at the end of a
hallway. Two paladins stood guard before it, along with a servant in
chamberlain's livery. "Prince
Daniel to see the king," said Tomkin, doing his best to deepen his voice. The
chamberlain looked down past his long nose at the boy and cocked an eyebrow. "If
you please, sir," added Tomkin, in a much smaller voice. The
chamberlain rapped three times with the big brass knocker set in the door,
opened it and announced, "Prince Daniel to see the king." Daniel
turned to Tomkin and saluted him in the manner of the paladins, right fist over
the heart. "Thank
you, Sir Guide, you have done well. Dismissed." Tomkin snapped to attention
and saluted smartly, but could not keep the smile off his face. Daniel turned
and entered the room. Argeus
rose from behind a large oak table. "Well,
son, have your friends filled your belly and your ears too full for you to drink
and talk with your father and an old friend?"
Hanging from a peg on the wall behind Argeus was a crook-topped
shepherd's staff of hickory wood, a brown leather bag and a battered sailcloth
pilgrim's hat--wide brimmed, flat topped and bleached nearly white by many years
in the sun. Daniel
remembered that hat. Argeus
nodded towards the other side of the room. Daniel spun round and cried out,
"Simon!" An
old brown bear of a man stood by the hearth. He wore tunic and trousers the
color of ripe wheat, a wide leather belt around his thick waist and well-worn
brown boots on his feet. The old man's round bald head shone above a mostly
silver beard, striped here and there with strands of its original golden hue;
the skin round his sapphire blue eyes crinkled like old parchment as he smiled. "Hello,
Rock-turner," replied Simon. "It’s good to see you again." Daniel
rushed across the room and embraced the old man. A
priest, wise man and wanderer, Simon would rest from his travels at the home of
Argeus. He always brought a gift in his bag for Daniel, sweets or a tin flute
when Daniel was very young, and, later, maps or books telling of far away
places. Though Simon was a priest, he was tied to no formal order. “I
serve the Lord God as He pleases, not as man pleases,” was how Simon explained
his calling. Simon had called Daniel "rock-turner" for that was the
priest’s first view of him as a boy; turning over rocks to see what was
underneath. Daniel spent many an hour walking with Simon, learning the names and
habits of the smaller creatures of the forest. Daniel had not seen Simon since
his sixteenth summer and his time at "Tankards
and time to drink them!" ordered the king. Servants came, poured ale for
the three men and left them. *
* * * * "Well
now, Simon," said Argeus, after half their tankards had been drained during
the small talk of old friends long parted, "you told me that you had news
of great import for Asulon and that Daniel should be here to hear it."
"I
have grave news for you, for your house and for all of Asulon," Simon
began. "Daniel, have you heard
of the guild of wealthy men who call themselves ‘The Builders’?" "Yes,"
nodded Daniel, "they are the heads of the wealthiest houses in Asulon and
the Unicorn kingdoms." "You
have spoken truly, but not completely," replied the priest. "They head
many of the wealthiest houses, true, but more importantly, they head the oldest
of the houses of wealth. They own of mercantile exchanges and banking houses,
they make the apothecary powders that physicians use and many other things. They
have become kings in their own way, for their treasuries, though less than their
realm's, are ruled by fewer men. They can focus their wealth to accomplish the
things they set out to accomplish. With their wealth, they build up men who
agree with their goals and tear down men who would hinder them. “They
have no army, yet many powerful men heed their call. Senators and centurions,
magistrates and ministers, priests and patriarchs, many who would rise to high
office and, having risen, remain there, come to the Builders Guild seeking
favor. And favor is given, but not without a price. Just a hint here, a
suggestion there, then a demand and, finally, when the Guild have their victims
addicted to their aid, a command: 'Do as we order or the gold you need to remain
where you are shall disappear.'" "And
it has been thus from the founding of the first city upon the earth,"
agreed Argeus. "Only the king is not beholden to such men for office, but
even the crown feels their power, for the Builders Guild and men like them
control many in the High Senate and the Senate controls the treasury of this
land." "And
yet," replied Simon, "even the High Senate knows it must please the
people of Asulon to keep their seats and the keys to that treasury. So they do
not do all that the Builders bid them do, at least not openly or quickly.
Instead the Senators try to balance pleasing those who elect them and pleasing
those who fund that election. Asulon's freedom has depended on that balance of
forces for many years. But now the Builders Guild plans to upset that balance,
to lay a subtle snare for the people of this land and, once that snare tightens
around their necks, bring them under a cruel enslavement." Simon
took a deep breath and closed his eyes as if in silent prayer before continuing. "King
Argeus, here, then, lies the danger. The Builders Guild, these uncrowned kings
of wealth, may not sit openly upon the throne here in Asulon, but they have
other ways to rule. In the Unicorn kingdoms across the sea, when they have not
attained the crown outright, they rule from behind the throne as firmly as if
they did sit upon it. They mean to do the same in Asulon, but first the
people must be lulled into a dependency on them. They have begun such a task in
Unicornia, starting in Argeus's
eyebrows knit together as he heard this. "But
how can this work? How can a merchant know the amount in a man's account just
from seeing a tattoo?" asked the king. "He cannot send a runner to the
banking house for every purchase. The method you describe would be like taking a
letter of script from a stranger. No merchant could conduct business that
way." "The
Guild has found a way, though not on their own--they had help from dark
places,” replied Simon. “To answer your question more directly, each
merchant has a black box, hexagonal in shape and about half a cubit in diameter,
with a round window of red crystal set into the top. Customers place their hands
atop this box. Something within the crystal then reads the number of the tattoo,
sending the information--as quick as thought itself--to a similar box at both
the banking houses of the customer and the merchant, transferring the amount of
the purchase from the account of the customer to that of the merchant." Surprise
and more than a little wonder showed upon the king's face. "These
boxes, though strange, seem a boon rather than a cause for alarm," said
Argeus. "No cutpurse could take your money unless he wanted to cut off your
hand and try to buy something by passing that bloody piece of meat over these
boxes." "The
danger is threefold,” Simon said, “with each succeeding danger leading to
the next. “The
first danger: Though the Guild will claim that they invented the device to make
this type of communication possible, these boxes hold nothing but trinkets--a
few mirrors and lenses, a small brass bell, some tiles of colored glass: things
to fool the simple should a box be broken open. No, the boxes work because of
the dark arts of sorcerers in league with the Guild. “The
second danger: The king of “And
the third danger: The Guild knows that many people will not tolerate a mark upon
their bodies. So they plan to begin with this." He
laid a thick bronze medallion on the table. "The
banking houses will use these first, as a test of the black box system. People
will wear these medallions and use them in place of the mark on the hand. The
men of Builders Guild hope the medallions will prepare them for the eventual use
of the tattoos. Look at the medallion: I am told that the three numbers at its
center are always the same." The
king picked up the medallion and examined it. A puzzled look came over his face.
"What
is it, Father?" asked Daniel. "Look
at this and tell me what you see," replied the king, handing his son the
medallion. Daniel
felt its weight in his hand. No small amount of bronze had gone into its
manufacture. It appeared about a third larger than a gold sovereign, the largest
coin used in Asulon. The medallion had a small hole set near the edge, probably
so that the piece could be worn around the neck, though its weight would make it
cumbersome. One side of the medallion had a broad gouge running across its face,
obscuring whatever design might be there, so he turned the medallion over. On
this side there was a clear imprint and the sight of it caught Daniel’s breath
in his throat: three hexagons, descending in size, each set within the other.
Each hexagon contained six numbers, so that there were three sets of six
numbers. At the center of the smallest hexagon three numbers were set apart,
written in old northern runes, little used now--perhaps as a way to hide their
meaning; six, six and six. "The
Tri-Hex," Daniel said, placing the medallion down on the table and pushing
it away from him. "Why would they choose such a symbol?" "Yes,
why indeed," agreed Simon. "Why choose a symbol that, for all those
who worship the Lord God through His son Yeshua, symbolizes the greatest evil
that will ever walk among men? Why? Because the knowledge that the Builders
Guild uses to power these black boxes comes from the servants of that very same
evil." “Who?”
Daniel asked. “Men
who call themselves ‘The Illuminati’,” Simon said. “The name means
‘The Enlightened Ones’ and it is a name I thought it had died out long
before I was born. But I should have known that a name may die, but the idea
behind it will live on as long as men wish it to. The Illuminati could rightly
be said to have started when man first raised a tower at “Anywhere
and anytime men have gathered to oppose God, or, if they did not believe in Him,
oppose the worship of Him by others, there, at that time, are the Illuminati. “‘The
Enlightened Ones’: an ironic name,” continued Simon, “for what we call
light, they call darkness, and acts we would call pure evil, they call pure
freedom. The Illuminati look upon the Lord God as the Great Tyrant, while the
enemy of God and man, who we know as Abaddon the Destroyer, they call Abaddon
the Disenslaver. Their power comes from knowledge given to them by Abaddon in
exchange for blood sacrifices…and their souls. The Black Boxes are evil,
because the makers of these boxes are evil and have built evil into their very
design.” “Yes,”
agreed Argeus, “just as the fruit of a poisoned tree will also be poison. And
yet, while no Yeshuan would willingly bear the mark of Abaddon’s servant; what
of others? What would you say to those who do not believe as we do? Many see
this as just a number and not evil.” "The
great danger in this system of boxes, medallions and marks threatens even those
who do not follow Yeshua,” said Simon. “The information taken with these
boxes can be given to anyone. One man in particular poses the greatest danger to
Asulon’s freedom if he acquires such knowledge.” “Who
is this man?” demanded Argeus. “The
Builders Guild will offer that information to you, o king,” replied
Simon. “You would then know of every purchase made by every person in the
realm. You could then say to any banking house, 'Remove authority to buy or sell
from any man I consider an enemy, let not one copper's worth of credit past to
them.' No one, rich or poor, great or small, could buy or sell unless he had the
permission of the king. The coin of the realm would be outlawed, as would trade
in silver and gold. Anyone the king deemed an enemy would face two choices,
submit to the king's will or starve." Simon
watched to see what Argeus would make of this news; his reaction would show the
true mettle of the man. The
king sat in silence for a long, thoughtful moment before speaking. "Even
if the use of the Tri-Hex is mere coincidence,” Argeus said at last, “this
system places far too much power in the hands of even a good king, and kings are
not always good. The more power a king has, the more he comes to believe that he
alone deserves that power. The kings of the old world thought that, since the
king's judgment went unquestioned, then all that the king did was right. 'If I
have done it, then it was destined to be done' became their motto. They began to
think of themselves as gods. My forefather Asa once said, 'The best of
governments would be one run by a good king with absolute power and the worst of
governments would be one run by a evil king with absolute power.' Therefore,
Asulonian freedom depends on power resting, not solely with the king, but
divided equally between the throne, the Senate, the High Court and the
people." Argeus
rose to his feet and paced, something he did, Simon knew, while preparing a plan
of battle. "Safety
for the people's freedom lies not with absolute power in the hands of one
man," said the king, "but in its being thinly spread, among as many
men as possible. These black boxes of the Builders Guild concentrate power in
the hands of one man, the one who controls the black box. It must not be allowed
on these shores." Simon bowed
his head before Argeus. "King
Argeus, your people do well to call you 'The Wise'. Now the Builders Guild,
through its Asulonian head, Sargon of the House of Stone, wishes to bring this
system of commerce to your realm." "After
what you have told me, do you think I would allow that system here?" "You
may have little choice in the matter," replied Simon, "for that which
has always restrained a king of Asulon from doing as much evil as he wishes,
also restrains him from doing as much good as he wishes. Remember, Argeus, you
invoked the king’s right of the One
Law when you limited the Senator's terms in office." "Father,
you have used your One Law already?" asked Daniel in surprise. "Yes,
on the very day after my coronation," replied Argues with a chuckle.
"I used my One Law to order that each senator may hold no more than two
terms in office. Since my law would pertain only to those elected after it was
made, the old men of the Senate thought themselves safe from its effects and did
not even try to raise the unanimous vote needed to forestall it. After all, has
not the defeat of a sitting senator been as rare as hen's teeth for the last
forty years or more? “Well
then. The elections came three months after my coronation and many new
candidates came forward, saying, 'Vote for me; I am one of you.' “And
so they were, for farmers and small merchants, physicians and teachers now ran
for seats that seemed not as sweet a prize to the power hungry and greedy. And
the people of Asulon said to themselves, 'I think Senators Gladhand and Backslap
have been at their jobs too long. They may have come to do good, but they stayed
to do well and did much too well for their own purses. It is time to let some
new blood into the Senate.’ And that is exactly what the people did, but no
one foresaw to what extent they would do so. Well, they voted out better than
half of the old Senate.” The
king smiled, as only a man remembering the fall of those who thought themselves
invincible may smile. “Oh,
I can tell you, the weeping of eyes and gnashing of teeth was great in the halls
of the High Senate when the results of that election were read. Most of these
losses came from the Plebeian party- the party that claimed to love the common
people, but loved levying taxes upon them even more. The new Patrician majority,
eager to show itself different from the old Plebeian leadership, proposed doing
away with all the old tax laws--from the High Senate's own laws down to those of
the smallest village--and making one tax law for all of Asulon, a tax upon the
sale of a good or service. This eliminated the most onerous of the old laws, the
tax on income, collected before a man got a single copper of his pay. This tax
hindered savings, and caused many a normally honest man in Asulon to hide his
income, so he could pay a reasonable amount in taxes and still have something
left to raise his family. “So
then, the new tax is collected only at the sale of an item or service. The
monies collected are evenly divided between the county in which the sale was
made, the provincial government above that county and, finally, the realm’s
treasury. The new tax is simple, understandable and open and the people of
Asulon have prospered for it. The common people save more and the treasury grows
even as we speak." "But,
Father," said Daniel, "do you regret using your One Law so soon into
your reign?" Argeus
shook his head. "I know that most kings have saved their One Law, keeping
that supreme weapon in reserve, the only law a king can make that requires a
unanimous vote of the High Senate to overturn. Yes, my son, with my One Law
spent, I know that if two-thirds of the Senators vote against me, they can block
any law I propose. Though this restriction keeps the king weak, it also has kept
us a free people. “And
because I have used my greatest weapon early in my reign, when those who might
have opposed me remained unsure of my purposes, I may now call upon many new men
in the Senate to put the realm's concerns before their own. Let me speak with
them and find a way to defeat this plan of the Builder's Guild, the sorcerers of
the Illuminati and the Evil One they both serve. We require a law that somehow
forbids these black boxes without speaking of them directly. For I fear that, if
the Guild gets wind of how much we know, any law we give the Senate would be
doomed before the first vote."
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